Hi,nice to see you are safe from the accident,and I want to know that does Cervelo give you warranty in such condition? I dont mean to be offensive, but I think its rider 's personal responsibility to the damage of the frame... do you buy some insurance project in you LBS? cheers

Hi,nice to see you are safe from the accident,and I want to know that does Cervelo give you warranty in such condition? I dont mean to be offensive, but I think its rider 's personal responsibility to the damage of the frame... do you buy some insurance project in you LBS? cheers

Driver's insurance is supposed to pay for it. If it was my fault, there is a crash replacement discount of 25% on the frame.

After much soul-searching, I've decided to downgrade (if you can call it that) to an S2. I can't justify spending so much money on a bike when work commitments mean that I'm pretty much relegated to the trainer for the next few riding seasons, and maybe the occasional weekend ride. Plus the few thousand I'm saving by dropping down could go towards my tuition bill, and the cherry on top is my planned S2 build is around 6200g (i.e. I would lose more than a kilo.)

The S5 is probably the most aero bike I've ever ridden, and I won't deny that it is better than the S2. Di2 was also awesome. But the S2 is still plenty of bike for someone who looks like he'll be relegated to Elite 3/4 races for the foreseeable future (i.e. Cat 4/5 for you Yankees). I'll suck up the seconds I'll lose and use that as motivation to train harder on those late nights at home.

sorry to hear about your accident and the write-off of such a beautiful bike, SSB. you must have been devastated - by both the accident and the loss of the bike. again, you have my sympathy.

you had to provide pictures to the insurance companies. right? would it be too morbid to request that you post some pictures of what the "t-boned" S5 looked like, post-mortem? please? was it cracked into 2 or more pieces?

also - you having been lucky enough to live to tell the tale - is there any advice you could offer, with hindsight, to us newbie cyclists to help us - and our bikes - steer clear of a similarly devastating ordeal? do you know what i mean? like, a "lessons learned" kind of thing?

of course, i agree that the driver was clearly at fault. and i, myself, have encountered more than my fair share of homicidal, sociopathic | psychopathic, cyclist-hating motorists. so i definitely empathize with you.

but, for example, what would you have done differently approaching the intersection? would you have put more lights on your bike? or, wore more high-viz clothes? or ridden slower? do you know what i mean? your experience - and the fortunate fact that you survived unscathed - could save others' lives.

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